John Williams III

A grown-up John-John Williams in the 1989 special Sesame Street: 20 and Still Counting.

thumb|300px|right|Emilio Delgado talks about John John.John Williams III (born in New York City, circa 1970), better known to audiences as John-John, was one of the many small children who appeared on the early seasons of Sesame Street. He joined the show at the age of three, after his mother answered an open call for Sesame Street kids. "The thing that clicked, my mother told me, was that I was able to relate to the Muppets. I wasn't afraid of them," Williams said in a 1998 interview. "And I remembered every single character's name." In another interview Williams said, "I think what they liked was that I communicated with the Muppets with eye contact, like they were humans." [1] He also could count in English, French, and Spanish.[1]

As a young man, Williams (nicknamed John John by his mother after John F. Kennedy Jr.)[1] joined the Air Force, and was stationed at Laughlin AFB in Texas. [3] He made a special appearance in the 1989 TV special Sesame Street: 20 and Still Counting, where he reunited with Herry Monster. Through a 2011 interview, published on ToughPigs, there is suggestion John John visited the set around this time.[4]

A 1998 interview in the San Antonio Express-News described a funny moment in Williams' relationship with his wife:

“

Williams has been married to Lupita, a native of Del Rio, for nine years. They met when he was stationed at Laughlin AFB. Two months into their relationship, he dropped the bomb. Williams told his future wife of his childhood stardom. She still laughs about the sudden revelation. "When he told me, right away it clicked: 'You're the kid with the cheeks,'" Lupita recalls. [3]

”

As of 1998, Williams and his wife resided in San Antonio with their two children, and was working on establishing himself as a Tejano singer, [3] following in his parents entertainment footsteps (his mother was a jazz singer, and his father was a bassist for Doc Severinsen's Tonight Show band).[1]

John-John wants to count backwards. Grover tells him to count backwards from 10, but John-John has a little trouble counting backwards.

Lost Paper Clips

Bert informs John-John he is sad because he lost his paper clips. Bert asks John-John to show his sad face. Bert is then angry and asks John-John to make his angry face. Finally Bert is happy because he remembers where he left the paper clips and John-John shows his happy face.

Counting

Bert and Sherlock Hemlock ask John-John if he wants to count, and John-John enthusiastically rises to the occasion.

John-John: A Case Study

Herry Monster and John-John count to 20.

In his 1974 book Children and Television: Lessons from Sesame Street, Gerald S. Lesser closely examines the interactions between children and Muppets, and the feelings experienced by children upon successfully learning or grasping a concept, what he terms "the power of the ordinary." Dr. Lesser uses the counting scene with John-John and Herry as a prime example.

“

John-John, a small black three year old, is counting to twenty with one of the Muppet Monsters. John-John is brimming with confidence, throwing back his head and bellowing each number in turn. Suddenly, reaching fourteen, he falters and realizes he does not know how to proceed. Confusion covers his face, his sublime confidence crumbles. The monster encourages him, telling him that he knows he can do it. And suddenly he does; "Fourteen!!" exclaims John-John. His face clears, his confidence returns, and he bellows the remaining numbers triumphantly. We have seen how one little boy handles an ordinary event, not knowing or remembering something, with great strength and poise. [5]

”

Lesser's memory is slightly faulty, however. In the actual sketch, John-John proceeds blithely along until he reaches 16. After a few moments, Herry feeds the number to John-John, who proceeds to count confidently to nineteen, at which point he asks Herry what number comes next. Herry then gives John-John a moment to think, and he comes up with the answer all on his own.